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Commented by Armin Schulz on October 10th, 2025 | 07:15 CEST

From food waste to profit: How Nestlé, Planethic Group, and HelloFresh are capitalizing on the latest megatrends

  • Food
  • Vegan
  • plantbased
  • foodtech

The food industry is currently undergoing what may be the most lucrative revolution in its history. Driven by groundbreaking technologies, from 2D printing for food to the hype surrounding plant-based proteins, and the global drive to curb food waste, entirely new markets are emerging. By keeping an eye on the companies driving these megatrends, you can identify the major growth opportunities of the future at an early stage. Today, we take a close look at the strategies of Nestlé, Planethic Group, and HelloFresh and ask ourselves: Which stocks really have what it takes to succeed?

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Commented by Nico Popp on August 7th, 2025 | 07:05 CEST

The most stable trend in the world: Kraft Heinz, Nestlé, Veganz

  • Food
  • Vegan
  • Sustainability
  • Retail

When market uncertainty makes stability in your portfolio a priority, experienced investors often turn to stocks in the consumer staples or food sectors. However, even the food market is highly competitive—products from the 1980s hardly attract customers today or require constant marketing spending. Instead, growth is now only possible through innovation. Here is how the major food multinationals are responding to tomorrow's trends and why private investors may have a head start on the corporations when it comes to Veganz shares.

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Commented by André Will-Laudien on July 28th, 2025 | 07:15 CEST

Better than Nvidia and without AI – 185% with Veganz, Bayer, Novo Nordisk, and Nestlé in focus

  • Vegan
  • Pharma
  • Biotechnology

It does not always have to be NVIDIA. German stocks are also performing well. Those who took advantage of Trump's tariff panic in April to buy in have since earned 75% with NVIDIA, but a whopping 185% with German plant-based nutrition expert, Veganz Group. Even the long-sidelined pharmaceutical giant Bayer has made an astonishing comeback with 50% growth, while Nestlé, supposedly an anchor in many portfolios, has lost 15%. Some call it selection luck, while others refer to it as sector rotation. It is currently apparent that the long, strong rally on international stock markets is benefiting only a few stocks. It remains fascinating that the stock market always celebrates when Donald Trump's tariff threats ultimately turn out to be less severe than initially expected. What remains for the economy, however, is less growth and high prices at the checkout. The new US policy stands for many things, but first and foremost, for less trade and economic downturn. How can investors still profit?

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Commented by Nico Popp on July 21st, 2025 | 07:15 CEST

A turning point in German healthcare! Are we moving closer to the US model? PanGenomic Health, Bayer, and Nestlé

  • Healthcare
  • healthtech
  • Pharma
  • Food

Are US-style conditions soon coming to Germany? Health economist Jürgen Wasem is calling for greater patient cost-sharing. Certain medications could be made available over the counter, allowing patients to access them more easily at their own expense. This could help reduce costs. This form of self-medication has long been common in the US, where people with certain ailments naturally turn to over-the-counter preparations or potent health foods. How can investors benefit from this trend? We present the shares of Bayer, Nestlé, and PanGenomic Health!

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Commented by Juliane Zielonka on March 17th, 2022 | 13:28 CET

Memiontec, China Water Affairs Group, Nestlé - Shares around water

  • Technology

Cold clear water, freshly treated for drinking, is a luxury that is not the order of the day in Asian countries. Therefore, water treatment plants and innovative water filtration systems are vital for the country and its people. A look into three stocks around water supply in Singapore, Indonesia, China, and worldwide helps make smart investment decisions. Because without water, no economy can produce. Without water supplies, supply shortages occur in cities. And when unfiltered drinking water carries pathogens, it kills entire generations. These companies provide water, both in the supply and in the transfer.

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Commented by Stefan Feulner on February 24th, 2022 | 12:34 CET

Rio Tinto, Triumph Gold, Nestlé - Conflicts and inflation

  • Gold

Producer prices of industrial products in Germany were 25% higher in January 2022 than in the same period last year. According to the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis), this represents the highest increase since the survey began in 1949. The main reason for the sudden increase is the sharp rise in energy prices. Price increases compared with the previous year were also particularly high for secondary raw materials such as paper and cardboard (+72.7%), butter (up 61.1%) and wooden packaging materials (+65.7%). The situation in Ukraine is getting worse, which is likely to fuel electricity and energy costs once again.

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Commented by Carsten Mainitz on June 7th, 2021 | 10:45 CEST

Mineworx Technologies, BASF, Nestlé - Circular economy investment idea

  • Investments

Everything is finite, every material and every raw material. Here is where the idea of a circular economy comes in. The aim is to develop a regenerative system in which resource use and waste production, emissions, and energy waste are minimized by slowing down, reducing, and closing energy and material cycles. The following three companies are all involved in the circular economy in different ways. Shareholders can also benefit from this.

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Commented by Nico Popp on April 28th, 2021 | 07:00 CEST

Nestlé, Kraft Heinz, The Very Good Food Company: Conservative investments - rethought

  • Vegan

As the Allensbach Market and Advertising Media Analysis (AWA) showed last year, 24.75 million people in Germany alone are interested in healthy eating and healthy lifestyles - and the trend is rising. Young people, in particular, are increasingly drawn to veganism. Even if it is scientifically disputed to what extent meat consumption is associated with poorer health, the ethical advantages are obvious. Where no animal was processed, no animal had to be fattened, kept and slaughtered. Established food companies and innovative newcomers are vying for customers in the food market. We present three shares.

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Commented by Nico Popp on March 2nd, 2021 | 09:45 CET

Beyond Meat, The Very Good Food Company, Nestlé: This growth tastes good

  • Vegan

PHW Group's latest veggie study shows it: Meatless is the trend. In Germany, one in two people already consciously abstains from meat now and then. Younger people, in particular, prefer meatless meals. Of the 18 to 29-year-olds surveyed, 14% eat vegetarian and 3% vegan. For companies that offer meat-free alternatives, this is excellent growth potential - after all, millennials will eventually settle down and earn more. In this case, premium providers around meat-free products could benefit the most.

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Commented by Mario Hose on January 24th, 2020 | 14:11 CET

Beyond Meat, Burcon NutraScience, Nestle - scalable growth with plant proteins

  • Food

Humanity is always striving for improvement. This has not only been the case since the climate debate, but innovations in all areas of everyday life are constantly changing our lives. The changes will never again be as slow as they are at this moment. Research and development solve problems or create new needs. In the ideal case even both. Nutritious and tasty food with an improved CO2 footprint is on the agenda of food producers like Beyond Meat and Nestle. But developing innovation costs not only money, but also time. The latter usually leads to partnerships or even takeovers.

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